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April 15, 2007
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Advertising: Shift Away From Ad-Free Has a Price
Thu, 13 Dec 2007 01:55:21 GMT | New York Times
Children who visit Webkinz.com, the popular virtual world for children who buy Webkinz stuffed animals, may also see advertisements on the site.
Barbados Government Fails To Pay Children?s Eyeglasses Service For A Full Year!
Fri, 14 Dec 2007 03:55:40 +0000 | Barbados Free Press
Dear Barbados Free Press: I am writing to you in the hope that you will publicise a disgrace which happening here in Barbados. I know of a little boy has been off school for 2 weeks now. No, he is not ill, he has simply broken his glasses! The optician who supplies the free spectacles for school children [...]
Forced Vaccinations = Crimes Against Children
Sat, 15 Dec 2007 13:41:31 +0000 | Newsvine
This is yet another example of big business taking people's good sense. The government is getting into some very "iffy" areas forcing this. If I were a parent, I would move before the government would make my children be vaccinated.
Naughty children 'lose out on ?40 million'
Mon, 17 Dec 07 17:18:28 GMT | londonstockexchange
Parents held out on a total of £40 million of pocket money this year, as a way of punishing naughty children, according to Abbey Banking.
Mon, 17 Dec 2007 06:06 GMT | CayCompass.com
The Royal Cayman Islands Police Service is urging parents to take an active role and interest in their children's activities this holiday season.
Do Opponents of S-CHIP Expansion Hate Children?
Tue, 18 Dec 2007 00:00:00 CST | Tax Foundation's Tax Policy Blog
It's hard to say no to children in need. The desire to help children is so fundamental that it can be hard for some people to reject poor public policy if it's enacted in the name of needy kids. This conflict between the desire to protect children and the desire to enact sound fiscal policy is at the center of the S-CHIP debate, a topic we have written about numerous times (here, here and here, among others). Unfortunately, many legislators and voters do not realize that these two goals need not be mutually exclusive; sound fiscal policy helps everyone—adults and children, rich and poor.
A new article from the Mises Institute titled "How Can You Oppose Health Care for Children?" analyzes the drawbacks of expanding S-CHIP with higher tobacco taxes, including some of the tax policy concerns we have written about. The article concludes:
Those favoring expanding SCHIP trumpet their compassion for children and attack opponents as inexcusably mean. But the Scrooge-versus-Tiny-Tim imagery is neither accurate nor complete. Instead, it crowds out rational consideration of an extremely questionable policy, especially when combined with urgent "we must act now" rhetoric. And if the strongest arguments supporters can make for it require both substantial misrepresentation and high pressure, they have a poor case.
WestJet reviewing policy that allows young children to fly unaccompanied
Tue, 18 Dec 2007 22:06:00 -0500 | CANOE
CALGARY - WestJet Airlines (TSX:WJA) is reconsidering the future of its policy that allows young children to fly without an accompanying adult after a five-year-old girl needed to be escorted off a plane by a stranger in Montreal last week.
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